The Restrict Act is The Internet Iron Curtain

Convenient events have transpired while your government advances speech-stifling legislation. The Teixeira leak arrives as The Restrict Act, a law peddled as addressing the security concerns surrounding TikTok, advances to undermine your first amendment rights.

Because, as J.B. Shurk at American Thinker reminds us, you are the biggest threat to their power.

 

For years, conservative websites struggled to survive financially as shadowbans and stealth blacklisting eliminated advertising revenues and throttled user engagement.  Online trolls infiltrated comment sections posting inflammatory content that could be used as false flag justifications to legally threaten or otherwise punish conservative forums.  Conservative content creators and their readers strenuously objected to the organized censorship war being waged against them, but few politicians, reporters, or pundits cared.

Now the cat is out of the bag, and neither government agencies nor their corporate co-conspirators are hiding their embrace of viewpoint discrimination.  The FBI continues to flag more language — including words as innocuous as “red pill,” “based,” and “Chad” — as extremist rhetoric.  Google blocked Right Side Broadcasting Network from covering President Trump’s Democrat-engineered Manhattan arraignment on YouTube, claiming that the censorship was necessary to combat “elections misinformation.”  A revolving door now exists to fill social media companies with employees from the ranks of the FBI, CIA, and Homeland Security.  Meanwhile, Klaus Schwab’s World Economic Forum has announced the hiring of millions of “information warriors” tasked with the mission to “seize control of the Internet” and serve as “digital first-responders” combating “misinformation.”

 

The deservedly maligned Restrict Act has arrived to systematize this oppression.

 


Sundance at The Conservative Treehouse reminds us that the recent leak of classified information alleged to have exposed lies about the war in Ukraine is likely itself an op, or at the very least, a crisis they won’t let go to waste.

 

The intel leak is the operation created by the Intelligence Community to support new expanded powers for the Fourth Branch of Government.  It should not be a surprise to discover the institution now leading the charge to give more power for U.S. intel agencies, is…. wait for it…  The Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. …

According to SSCI Chairman Mark Warner, ‘The Restrict Act’ will give more power and authorities to the Executive Branch to deal with internet danger.  Now the SSCI sees the classified intel leaks as evidence for the importance of the Restrict Act.

 

Undercover DC ads,

 

 

Here’s the screen grab from Kash Patel.

 

Kash Patel - Pentagon leak is a set up for restricr act

 

 

No way, indeed. To quote Baby Herman from Roger Rabbit, it stinks like yesterday’s diapers. But the Restrict Act is real, and while we have, at least numerically, a Republican majority in Congress, expecting them to step up and block this in any meaningful way – useless amendments are expected to put a patina on this tyrannical turd – is a fantasy.

And it won’t stop intel leaks. Hillary’s abuse of protocol gave everything that passed through her home-cooked server to the Chinese government in real-time. For all we know, that was deliberate.

Democrats hate America, and they hate you. As J.B. Shurk noted, “Make no bones about it: the federal government’s number-one worry is you.” They can control everything else, so you are job number one, and the Restrict Act gets them closer than they’ve ever been.

 

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